book series

The Great Accelerator

By: Paul Virilio

On 10 September 2008, amid much fanfare, the Great Collider run by CERN in Geneva was turned on. The Collider was supposed to fire protons around a seventeen-mile loop of tunnels, causing them to crash into one another at close to the speed of light and break into even tinier particles. Nine days later the Collider broke down and had to be switched off, the accelerator temporarily silenced, the reckless search for 'God's particle' put on hold.

At the same time the speeded-up markets of global finance, with screens of multi-coloured numbers designating the rapid flows of capital, are suddenly thrown into confusion when news spreads that the great Titan of Wall Street, Lehman Brothers, has filed for bankruptcy. Investors panic, share prices plunge and the accelerated markets of global finance seize up.

In his latest book, Paul Virilio - the leading theorist of our obsession with technology, speed and power - rewrites 'The Book of Exodus', but the exodus he talks about is no longer conducted in a single file of people headed for some possible Promised Land. It is a closed-circuit exodus within a cramped world, where reduction in human stocks will suddenly look like the only solution to the lockdown of history.

Hardcover

Status

Available

Edition

First
Edition

ISBN

9780745653884

ISBN10

074565388X

Publication Dates ROW:

May 2012

Publication Dates US:

Jun 2012

Publication Dates Aus & NZ:

May 2012

Format

198 x 129 mm
7.78 x 5.08 in

Pages

100
pages

Paperback

Status

Available

Edition

First
Edition

ISBN

9780745653891

ISBN10

0745653898

Publication Dates ROW:

May 2012

Publication Dates US:

Jun 2012

Publication Dates Aus & NZ:

May 2012

Format

191 x 126 mm
7.50 x 4.95 in

Pages

100
pages

* Exam copies only available to lecturers for whom the book may be suitable as a course text.Please note: Sales representation and distribution for Polity titles is provided by John Wiley and Sons Ltd.

'Virilio has long cultivated a kind of Delphic compression,
addictive once you tune in to its cadences.'Steven
Poole, The Guardian

'An exciting yet terrifying account of how contemporary society is
shaped by an ever-increasing demand for speed … Locating time
at the centre of all forms of knowledge, Virilio shows how speed
and its measurement is a question belonging to the realm of
politics, economics and religion as much as to physics and quantum
physics.'Times
Higher Education

'Paul Virilio's indispensable new work, The Great
Accelerator, considers history, privacy and, especially,
speedup. If our accelerated postmodern culture is a closed circuit,
Virilio asks, are not speed and light reconfigured as "dromology"
and traditional philosophy as too "slow"? Thought-provoking and
contentious, The Great Accelerator will be a widely
discussed book.'John Armitage, Northumbria University

'Paul Virilio's The Great Accelerator continues his
interrogations of speed and time forecasting the end of history,
time and knowledge as we once knew them. Futuristic to the zero
point, Virilio dazzles, illuminates and provokes as we speed
through his latest vision of what is to come and what's happening
now.'Douglas Kellner, UCLA, author of Cinema Wars and Media
Spectacle and the Crisis of Democracy